Hola mi Gente,
I usually post this around this time of year… it’s a Thanksgiving tradition of sorts on this blog. Sometimes, when I think this too self-indulgent, or passé (I am a walking cliché, it seems), someone will send me a message usually beginning like so: “I read your blog and I never comment… ” (LOL!) And it never fails, someone will tell me that reading the following helped them, or they shared it with someone they thought it could help. So… here goes.
I usually post this around this time of year… it’s a Thanksgiving tradition of sorts on this blog. Sometimes, when I think this too self-indulgent, or passé (I am a walking cliché, it seems), someone will send me a message usually beginning like so: “I read your blog and I never comment… ” (LOL!) And it never fails, someone will tell me that reading the following helped them, or they shared it with someone they thought it could help. So… here goes.
Redemption Song
My life is my message
The cliché that life is stranger
than fiction is true enough. And believe me: my life has been pretty much
“strange.” Thanksgiving Day has its own personal meaning for me, as I am
certain it does for everyone. Actually, Thanksgiving Day has layers of meaning.
First, there is the glossing over
the very real consequences of colonialism, the mythical version of Thanksgiving
creates a fairy tale out of land theft, betrayal, brutality, and genocide,
functioning to erase the very real and traumatic experiences of entire indigenous
nations. This whitewashing and outright erasure of indigenous history is not
only inhumane and oppressive to indigenous people, it is also unfair to all
U.S. citizens who stand to learn from a rich and equally tragic history.
On another level, people of Puerto
Rican descent have traditionally taken US holidays and used them as
opportunities to express our own cultural identity. For example, Puerto Ricans
will eschew the traditional holiday fare of turkey and potatoes and substitute lechon and pasteles, Puerto Rican culinary staples. If we do cook turkey, we
cook it pavo-chon-style -- a turkey
prepared in a manner that makes it taste like lechon (pork suckling). Also, the holidays are always a chance to
celebrate our music, our unique forms of dancing, and kinship ties. Therefore,
Puerto Ricans subvert the mythical (actually genocidal) Thanksgiving and give
it their own meaning. And as humans, that’s what we do best, we create meaning.
Thanksgiving Day is also now
primarily identified as a secular all-inclusive day of expressing appreciation
for life and having gratitude for the things we need to live a happy and
healthy life. As a Latino, the cultural values of extended family ties and
Thanksgiving evoke childhood memories of large (and often hilariously insane)
family get-togethers.
However, for me Thanksgiving holds
its most significant meaning on a very personal level. You see, it was on this
day twenty-six years ago that I experienced the first of a series of “spiritual
awakenings” that would drastically change my life. The exact date is November
26, 1990 and it often happens that it falls on or near Thanksgiving Day. A
couple of weeks before that fateful day, on a cold, drizzly November day, I was
so overcome with despair that I considered and attempted suicide. It is
actually a little funny: As I climbed over the rail on the Brooklyn Bridge’s
pedestrian walk (it’s not easy to jump off that damned bridge!), I was so
skinny from malnutrition and years of substance abuse that a strong Nor’easter
wind knocked me back on my ass to the pedestrian walkway. I saw this as the
ultimate failure which gives you an idea of my state of mind at the time.
I walked away from that only to opt
for a more torturous suicide: the daily act of chasing that White Lady, Heroin.
Ensnared by my warped thinking, I had this fear that I would botch up my own
suicide and merely succeed in paralyzing myself, condemning myself to chase
drugs from the disadvantage of a wheelchair. In fact, I remember another addict
who was in a wheelchair. I decided I would make someone else put myself out of
my misery.
And though I speak lightly today of
that time, I was so miserable. I do not believe in a God in the traditional
Christian/ Judeo sense -- an anthropomorphic omnipotent super being. Yet back
then I would pray each night that some Higher Power would find it in its mercy
to take my life me my sleep. Still, every day I awoke to my pain and despair. I
would always wake up sick and broke, but somehow manage to spend $300 by the
end of the day, feeding a merciless heroin habit.
If you are wondering, I fed my drug
habit by ripping off drug-dealers, never a safe proposition. One day a victim
of one of my swindles threatened me with a gun. I grabbed the gun by the
barrel, put it to my forehead, and begged him to shoot. All I asked was that he
made sure to kill me because, “You would be doing me a favor, motherfucker.”
This occurred in broad daylight in the middle of a crowded New York City
street. I remember a crowd forming and people screaming; but what I remember
most was thinking that this was my way out. “Do it,” I yelled. He pulled the
trigger and…
Nothing happened.
I don’t know if the gun jammed or
if it wasn’t loaded, whatever the reason, the gun failed to discharge. My
would-be “assistant suicider” freaked out, yanked the gun from my hands, and
walked away. I called after him, letting him know he could get another chance.
That’s how much I wanted to die. And, I thought, I could do nothing right.
That wasn’t the worst of it, my
life continued to bottom out until November 26th, 1990 when I experienced an
incident so traumatic it would change me and my world in an inexplicable way.
Actually, most people would consider the events that transpired on that cold,
dreary November day as a defeat. Very simply, after being released from New
York City’s infamous jail, Rikers Island, for exactly fourteen days, I was
re-arrested. It was also that last day of my active addiction -- the last day I
took a drug.
I didn’t know it then but it was
the beginning of a new life: a life that today is far from perfect, that has
suffering, illness, death, and many challenges, but also contains an invincible
of joy at its core. This is part of the reason I do the work that I do. I know
even the worst of us have the potential to liberate ourselves from socially
constructed or self-made prisons. And let me be clear: we’re all “doing time”
in some way, we all wear shackles. To a degree, we all enact patterns of
behavior or carry the proverbial baggage.
No, I am not a religious person. My
personal view is that religion is for people who are afraid of hell and
spirituality is for those who have already been there. I simply try to be the
best person I can be on a daily basis and oftentimes I fall short of the mark.
However, my intentions are usually good and my direction somewhat orderly. I
try to live a life centered on compassion for others, personal growth,
self-actualization, and passion for social change.
On that day, twenty-six ago, I had
no way of knowing of the possibility of life as it has manifested itself for me
today. The past year has been one of the most challenging for me in a long
time. A lot of that has to do with being unemployed. Today, I will most likely
lose all my property in storage, my cell has been cut off, and I’m living in…
well, you get the idea. Yet, I am for the most part happy today. It’s a
happiness independent of any person, place, or thing. On the surface I can be
sad, happy, angry, disappointed, disgusted -- I can be experiencing any number
of attachments -- but at the center, at the very core of me, there is an
invincible joy greater than any drug-induced high I have ever experienced. And
believe me, coming from me, that’s saying a lot.
On that day, sitting there in the
midst of total failure and utter humiliation, I came undone. And that was a
good thing, because in experiencing complete obliteration I became open to
something more than my small self. In emptying myself, I came to see that what
I perceived as the void was in reality my innate and boundless potential as a
human being.
I am genuinely grateful. As I said
before, this past year, as with all years, has been a challenging. I have
experienced sadness, frustration, happiness, love, rejection (the full
catastrophe!). I could easily surmise, if I were so disposed, that my life,
that life itself, sucks. But that’s a coward’s lie. Life is a gift -- probably
the most precious of gifts. My life today is like a redemption song -- a song
of freedom. And at the very least there is nothing worse (or better) than that
fateful day twenty-five years ago. Today I woke up and I am… here… and for that
I am most grateful.
May you all have as much to be
thankful for.
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